In that case, he was arraigned in April on a seven-count indictment that charged him with five felony counts of falsifying business records and the felonies of grand larceny and insurance fraud in connection with the February 2014 blaze.

Nunez is not accused of setting the fire at 389 Washington Ave., and the burned building has been demolished. Nunez still owns the property and continues to practice dentistry next door.

The latest indictment pertains to charges brought by the Ulster County Sheriff’s Office stemming from several allegedly false, material statements contained in a pistol permit application Nunez filed in February 2014, Orange County District Attorney David Hoovler said in May. Hoovler’s office is acting as the special prosecutor in the case.

Hoovler said the false statements pertained to Nunez’s previous military service. The complaint alleges he was absent without leave from the U.S. Marine Corps from August 1987 until he was apprehended in July 1990 and that his subsequent “Separation in Lieu of Trial by Court Martial” was a “discharge for cause” that had to be reported on the pistol permit application.

On the permit application, Nunez checked the “No” box in answer to questions about whether he ever had been terminated or discharged from any employment or the armed forces and whether he ever had been arrested, Hoovler said.

In May, Kingston City Judge Lawrence Ball adjourned the pistol permit case for grand jury evaluation and released Nunez on his own recognizance.